Tens of millions of Americans are asked to choose their preferred candidate for president – The winner usually gets his party’s nomination
Americans in 15 states they will vote tomorrow Tuesday at qualifiers elections to choose their candidate Republicans and of Democrats in the presidential elections.
Tomorrow, also known as “Super Tuesday(Super Tuesday), is crucial for the primaries and traditionally the winner each side is in a better position to receive it anointing of his party.
The Republicans tomorrow will choose more than a third of the electors who are eligible to nominate their candidate for the presidential election in November.
With the exception of the internal party elections that took place yesterday Sunday in Washington, capital of the USA, in which Nikki Haley won, former President Donald Trump has won all the other contests that have been held so far.
Tomorrow is expected to be Haley’s last chance to stay in the race.
For Democrats the internal party elections do not hold any surprises, as outgoing President Joe Biden will undoubtedly once again be the party’s nominee in the presidential election.
Tens of millions of voters
Tens of millions of Americans are asked to choose the candidate of their choicefrom Maine in the northeastern USA, to California at the other end of the country, passing through Texas and to American Eastern Samoa.
Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont and Virginia also vote tomorrow.
The simultaneous voting in so many US states is an opportunity for candidates to prove that they can – or cannot – mobilize voters of different profiles.
No surprise?
Biden does not have a serious opponent in the internal party electionsa common occurrence for the outgoing president seeking a second term.
More unusual is the fact that Trump, as a former president seeking to return to the White House, has won all but one of the party polls so far.
Tomorrow 874 electors will be chosen from a total of 2,429 who will nominate the candidate of the Republican party for the November presidential election during the party’s convention in July.
The Trump campaign estimates that at Super Tuesday will garner 773 electors and two weeks later will be mathematically impossible to beat.
Haley remains in the race
His only opponent is the former governor of South Carolina, Haley, claims that the 40% of the vote she won in her home state of New Hampshire proves that the Republican party remains divided over Trump.
He further argues that has a better chance than the former president to beat Biden in November.
The former US ambassador to the UN he had previously pledged to stay in the race for the anointing until at least Super Tuesday.
According to experts, the main reason he hasn’t dropped out yet is that he hopes Trump won’t be able to run in November because of his many legal adventures and possible health problems.
Source :Skai
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